A Tracer Study ReportA TRACER STUDY OF THE M.Ed CLASS OF 1999
AT THE UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSRAND
Rinel Sing
0010619 T
University of the Witwatersrand, in partial fulfilment of the
requirements
for the Degree of Masters in Education: Policy, Planning and
Management
Supervisor: Professor M Cross
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ii
DECLARATION
I hereby declare that this research report is my own, unaided work.
It is being submitted in
partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Masters in
Education, at the
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. It has not been
submitted before for any
degree or examination, at any other University.
______________________________
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DEDICATION
This research report is dedicated to my beloved parents, Mr and Mrs
W M Sing, for
consistently inspiring, motivating and believing in me.
In loving memory of my uncle, the late Mr D Singh who accomplished
so much in his
short time with us.
To my sweet wife Chandika Sing, my pillar of strength and support,
for always igniting
the best in me.
My adorable daughters, Aksara, Vyasti and Isha Sing, who make each
day a fun-filled and
memorable one.
Rinel Sing 0010619 T
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
I gratefully acknowledge the guidance and support provided by my
supervisor, Professor
M Cross. I am deeply indebted to him for providing me with the
guidance, motivation and
inspiration that has helped me to accomplish this research report
successfully.
I wish to acknowledge and express my gratitude to:
Judith Inglis, my co-supervisor, for her kindness, time and
friendship.
My family, for their love, support and encouragement.
Career Trajectories of Masters in Education (M.Ed) Students.
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ABSTRACT
The expansion of higher education and changes in the labour markets
seem to have
reached a point where training for an M.Ed is affected by a number
of issues traditionally
raised in the context of graduate employment and work. Growing
emphasis is placed on
general skills and flexibility, which is briefly mentioned in this
report. Labour market
theory, human capital development, social capital and career
development are explored in
detail. Management is no longer perceived in terms of maintaining
the business machine
but is evolving into a motivator and leader of staff, an
inspirational entity that is
quintessential to the retention of highly qualified staff . This
has resulted in the language
of business changing, thus the „efficient company has become a
„learning organisation
(Germishuys, 2006). Therefore it is of great interest to actually
conduct a case study of 11
M.Ed. graduates to track their career trajectories to see where
this prestigious qualification
has taken them. The researcher traces a general group of M.Ed
graduates from the class of
1999 from the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits). The main idea
of this study is to
ascertain exactly what it is that the sample M.Ed graduates have
accomplished in their
professional lives. It was found that the colour of ones skin,
background, contextual
factors, opportunities, social networking and career aspirations
have played a pivotal role
in the career progression of the M.Ed. graduates.
Key words:
development, employment policy, career trajectories.
1
1.1 INTRODUCTION
............................................................................................................
1
1.3 THE MAIN ARGUMENT
..................................................................................................
3
1.4 RATIONALE
..................................................................................................................
4
2.1 INTRODUCTION
............................................................................................................
7
2.4 SOCIAL CAPITAL
........................................................................................................
15
2.5 CAREER DEVELOPMENT
.............................................................................................
18
2.7.2 Post-graduate degrees with thought and perception.
...................................... 25
2.7.3 The labour market dictates career choice.
...................................................... 26
2.7.4 Increased mobility of skilled labour
................................................................
27
2.7.5 Competition for access and retention of professional labour
.......................... 29
2.7.6 The „push and pull factors linked to the „brain drain/„brain
gain of
academics
.........................................................................................................
31
3.1 INTRODUCTION
..........................................................................................................
33
3.4.1 Extensive literature review
..............................................................................
36
3.4.2 Document analysis
...........................................................................................
36
3.4.3 Case studies
.....................................................................................................
36
3.6 INTERVIEWS
...............................................................................................................
40
3.8 VALIDITY AND RELIABILITY OF THE
RESEARCH..........................................................
42
3.9 LIMITATIONS OF THE RESEARCH
................................................................................
42
Career Trajectories of Masters in Education (M.Ed) Students.
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4.1 INTRODUCTION
..........................................................................................................
44
4.2 AIMS OF ACQUIRING A MASTERS IN EDUCATION DEGREE
.......................................... 45
4.3 UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSRAND – A BRIEF BACKGROUND
............................... 45
4.4 POLICY AND COURSE OUTLINE
COMMENTARY............................................................
46
4.4.1 Education Policy, Planning and Management
................................................ 47
4.4.2 Compulsory Research Design and Research Report courses
.......................... 49
4.5 CONCLUSION: GRADUATE EXPECTATIONS, EXPERIENCES AND CHALLENGES
............. 50
4.5.1 Graduate expectations
.....................................................................................
50
5 CHAPTER FIVE: EFFECTS OF THE M.ED DEGREE
............................................ 57
5.1 INTRODUCTION
..........................................................................................................
57
5.3 CONCLUSION: RECOMMENDATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FROM THE
INTERVIEWEES .... 77
6 CHAPTER SIX: CONCLUSION
...................................................................................
80
6.1 INTRODUCTION
..........................................................................................................
80
6.3 CONCLUSION
..............................................................................................................
82
BIBLIOGRAPHY
................................................................................................................
855
Table 2 : Challenges faced by M.Ed graduates………………………………………...
54
Table 3 : Career chart – previous/current occupations of sample
M.Ed graduates……. 58
Table 4 : The pursuit of a Ph.D or possible change in field of
study………………….. 62
Table 5 : Correlation between Masters degree/enhancement of
management
skills/other abilities…………………………………………………………..
Table 6 : The effects of employment policies on
graduates…………………………… 67
Table 7 : The relationship between having an M.Ed degree and
relocating abroad…... 72
Table 8 : Extent of change/impact a Masters degree has on a
graduate………………. 75
1
1.1 Introduction
Despite recent debates, possessing a Masters degree is still a
highly sought-after qualification
on the labour market, notwithstanding the growing emphasis of
problem-solving approaches.
South Africas labour supply problems have been exacerbated in
recent years by the shortage
of qualified post graduate students. This is set to have a
significantly unfavourable impact on
the supply of skilled and experienced workers and as a result, also
on the productive capacity
of the South African economy. There are too few Masters graduates
available in the labour
market. One of the greatest challenges facing South Africa today is
to increase the supply of
skilled labour and educated labour. How can this be achieved? The
answer lies in education,
training and human development, which is where an M.Ed. graduate
has a significant
advantage.
The Skills Development Act 97 of 1998 aims to develop the skills of
the labour force, of
which the M.Ed graduates are an important part, by increasing the
investment in education
and training in the labour market. More specifically, the aim is to
improve productivity and
competitiveness, to improve the work prospects and occupational
mobility of workers, to
promote self-employment and to improve social services. However
important this is for the
people in this country, the researcher argues that it is equally
important to upgrade ones
qualifications for the reason that a Masters degree can be the
foundation on which to build
skills, that can be taught and assimilated while on the job.
Germishuys (2006) contends that
in todays economy, knowledge-based work is relentlessly replacing
manual work. We are
thus witness to the dawn of perhaps the most dynamic workplace
environment in history.
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Against this background, the study investigates the career
trajectories of a sample of Wits
M.Ed graduates from different backgrounds, with a focus on how the
M Ed degree might
have influenced their professional development and careers, or in
other words, the effect of
the achievement of the post-graduate Masters degree on their
professional lives.
1.2 Aim of the research
The study aims to trace the employment status of Masters graduates
who graduated in 1999,
with the intension of focus on the 1999 M.Ed course in Policy and
Management. It is a tracer
study examining a sample of 11 graduates who have completed their
post-graduate degree
with reference to the following key question: -
Has their Masters degree provided windows of opportunity for them
in the labour market?
Methodological and pedagogical aspects of the 1999 curriculum have
been analysed to
determine which facets were successful in helping the graduates of
that year achieve their
career goals.
The acquisition of a Masters Degree in Education is indeed a
noteworthy accomplishment. It
is a post-graduate degree and is pursued by students for a variety
of reasons, perhaps some
with an underlying intrinsic commitment to life-long learning or an
interest in further career
advancement. The subsequent academic and professional well-being of
their past students are
sure to arise in the minds of many a lecturer and professor. What
have my students done with
their degrees? Into what have they ventured after completing their
courses? Were the
sacrifices they made worthwhile? Did their courses provide them
with adequate knowledge,
skills and experience necessary to achieve their professional goals
or expectations within the
world of work?
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A key issue addressed is the impact that a Masters degree has on an
individuals opportunity
for employment, promotion, managerial skill development and
possible career changes. The
research explores whether the programme has equipped graduates to
attain a managerial role
or any other form of career progression within or outside the field
of education. It is of
importance to this research report to find out whether an
individuals qualifications have a
bearing on professional advancement.
The following key questions will help to realise the answers to the
main question of the
study:
What were the graduates intrinsic reasons, in terms of career
trajectories, for
pursuing higher education goals and what was the transpired outcome
upon
completion of the Masters programme?
What are the beneficial factors that contribute to the pursuits of
an M.Ed degree?
Is there a reciprocal relationship between essential interpersonal
values of a student
pursuing an M.Ed degree and white-collar employment market
expectations?
Does the attainment of an M.Ed degree impact on ones upward career
progression?
Can an M.Ed degree be linked to an improvement in job
performance?
How does the graduates background impact upon his/her market
mobility?
1.3 The main argument
Individuals aspire towards obtaining an M.Ed degree for various
reasons, the most common
being advanced pursuit of knowledge or financial, in that career
progression can warrant an
improved salary package to ensure financial security in a volatile
economic market. While the
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degree may facilitate upward mobility, higher salaries and greater
status, there are other
underlying factors as well. Factors like networking, social
background and qualifications
contribute towards attaining these aspirations of upward mobility
at the workplace. This
study argues that by obtaining the M.Ed degree, together with
personal ambition and social
background, individuals are able to apply themselves towards
achieving greater career
mobility and to get ahead in the workplace at a professional and
intrinsic level. In tracing the
12 graduates (one of whom sadly passed away before the study and
was thus not included)
from the class of 1999 from the Wits M.Ed degree, this study shows
that higher degrees play
a vital (but not sole) role in fulfilling aspirations of upward
mobility at the workplace.
1.4 Rationale
The knowledge base regarding the progression of post-graduate
Masters students in South
African universities is limited. The purpose of this study is to
add insightful information from
previous Wits Masters graduates to the knowledge base. The latter
justifies the need to
conduct a tracer study that explores and reveals the educational
aspirations and career goals
of M.Ed students and their resultant career progression.
The research lends itself to evaluating increased options of
graduates in life after graduation.
Universities need to know what career trajectories graduates can
expect and what sort of
career guidance and development will best equip them to deal with
life beyond the university.
By conducting this tracer study, the researcher aims to find if and
how an M.Ed degree has
assisted the graduate in life after university, focussing on their
career trajectories and career
mobility.
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The research consists of five chapters:
Chapter 1: This chapter provides an introduction, aim and rationale
for the research report. It
clarifies the need for enquiring into the career trajectories of
M.Ed graduates through a tracer
study. Chapter 1 also provides an overview of each of the
subsequent chapters of the research
report.
Chapter 2: This chapter explains the literature review and
conceptual framework upon which
this study is based. The researcher argues that critical and
fundamental literature on labour
market theories are the major force that dictates what employment
opportunities are
available. Human capital development, which asserts a positive
relationship between
investments in the development of human beings, and economic
growth, and social capital,
which asserts that the individual has access through his or her
personal networks by virtue of
belonging to or associating with a particular organisation e.g.
alumni associations, business
firms and government agencies. In other words, people equip
themselves to promote their
careers by obtaining a proper tertiary education. Finally, the four
concepts of labour market
theories, human capital, social capital theory and career
development, are linked in order to
highlight their importance in attaining career mobility. This
chapter conveys in the
conceptual framework six key assumptions that are pertinent to the
research report.
Chapter 3: Chapter 3 shows processes and methods used for data
gathering and analysis.
The aim of this chapter is to concentrate on key aspects related to
the research design, the
type of research chosen and its limitations, tracer studies, case
studies, the interview design,
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interview methods, validity and reliability of the research, the
population researched, the
sample size as well as the limitations of the research.
Chapter 4: This chapter provides a contextual map of the study and
explores the policies and
course outlines that were offered for a Masters degree at Wits in
1999. The aim of this
chapter is to examine whether the courses met with the expectations
of the graduates and
their responses. The expectations, experiences and challenges faced
by the M.Ed graduates
are discussed and the enabling and constraining factors of current
employment policy is
investigated.
Chapter 5: The main point of this chapter is to see what the sample
of graduates have since
done with their lives. In relation to the research this chapter
provides recommendations and
suggestions for aspiring students wishing to enrol for a Masters
degree at Wits. This chapter
highlights the debate of the quintessence of a post-graduate degree
such as a Masters in
Education degree from Wits.
Chapter 6: The aim of this chapter is to conclude this research
report. The researcher argues
that an M.Ed. degree positively influences the career trajectories
of post graduates, but there
are other factors that make a difference as well. The main point of
this chapter is to highlight
the importance of developing human capital, the establishment of
networks via the medium
of social capital, in order to promote career development, which in
turn helps one to gain
momentum in the labour market.
Career Trajectories of Masters in Education (M.Ed) Students.
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2.1 Introduction
This chapter provides a literature review of key theoretical
perspectives regarding career
aspirations, which determines the points explored in the conceptual
framework regarding the
issues for conducting this particular research report. The review
scrutinizes the main debates
on career progression within the context of earning a post-graduate
degree. In this chapter the
researcher argues that there are four key concepts interlinked with
post-graduate studies
which allow individuals opportunities for upwards and outwards
career mobility.
The chapter begins by clarifying key terms and concentrates on the
four key concepts. The
first concept focuses on labour market theories, which examine the
employability of the
individual. The second part examines the significance of human
capital development, i.e.
developing ones cognitive ability and skills through the
acquisition of authentic educational
qualifications. The third concept focuses on social capital,
revolving around an individuals
ability to establish social networks with influential others. The
fourth part explores career
development and how this contributes towards an enhanced
lifestyle.
The conceptual framework draws from the literature review the
following main points,
arguing that career mobility is accompanied by other important
factors besides education:
Labour markets dictate career choice.
Factors enhance competition for access and retention of
professional labour.
Post-graduate degrees provide job/salary opportunities.
Push and pull factors linked to „brain drain/„brain gain of
academics.
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2.2 Labour market theories
The labour market is an extremely powerful force that dictates what
employment
opportunities are available. Lindley (1996) states that some
educational and training measures
aim to make the labour market work better by presenting better
information about courses,
qualifications and peoples achievements. This is done by
rationalising what information is
available and making it easier for the different actors in the
system to understand the
relationship between the different staging posts and paths taken.
Hence measures were taken
to raise the quality and accessibility of information about an
individuals performance and
transitional activity in moving from school to work. However,
students can make their own
choices. Research in Britain suggests that young people are
extremely resourceful, capable of
adjustment to abrupt changes in status and manage to reconcile
themselves to the reality of
the labour market (Lindley, 1996).
In order to produce a highly skilled and competent workforce,
higher education has had to
prepare its course curriculum to meet that need. Lindley (1996)
substantiates this point as he
contends that since the 1990s the labour market demanded, and
expected, university courses
offered to be of a consistently high standard. Consequently, the
National Records of
Achievement was introduced to create transparency of the
achievement of graduates in the
British Qualification System. Considerable change was undertaken.
Action plans were
adopted to aid the planning of, and reflection upon, progression.
Clearly, in the South African
Qualification System, similar measures have to be taken to adapt
courses and qualifications
structures in order to change the nature and extent of course
delivery through greater access
and increased participation through offering better course
packages. In other words, tertiary
institutions have to „up the scale in order to meet the increasing
demands of the workplace.
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Many „pull (beneficial) factors drive graduates to further
themselves. Barth (2001) contends
that those who favour certification approaches to learning believe
that it is useful to have a
qualification because qualifications take learning to recognisable
levels. A university degree
is a pull factor that certainly boosts the status of the individual
and hopefully opens many
avenues to pursue better employment, which is attainable through
building up ones human
and social capital. In order to better market oneself in a highly
competitive arena, a student is
driven to attain a unique edge over the next candidate applying for
the same job. It is
recognised that the status attached to university degrees ensures
that those who underwent
training and have certificates as proof of their degrees get
prestigious jobs coupled with
higher salaries – as opposed to those who do not have degrees. This
is a perception held by
many a student embarking on further studies.
Building and strengthening human capital is becoming a prominent
trend in the corporate
world today. It is considered to be important because in actual
working situations individuals
are faced with challenging experiences which they have to strive to
overcome in order to
survive. Education provides one with tools to cope with a multitude
of situations in the best
way possible and assists in aligning professional, academic and
general knowledge.
Universities are meant to teach one how to best utilise ones
cognitive ability. Highly
educated people entering the labour market are almost certain to
find success versus those of
lesser education. Despite constant complaints that schooling and
higher education do not
prepare learners for the world of work, the researcher feels that
an educated person can
increase production in the workplace. Hence those lucky enough to
achieve higher education
qualifications already have an advantage in the labour market as
well as in the international
world.
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Chisholm (2004) maintains that the survival of the fittest, most
competent or best qualified, is
the norm of the labour market. Through skills and qualifications
graduates gain mobility,
flexibility and autonomy. People with higher education are
generally more mobile than those
with a lesser education. Labour flows across international labour
markets are central to the
understanding of demand and supply of labour. As a result of
greater autonomy, graduates are
in a position to dictate their terms of employment. Due to further
education and skills,
graduates enjoy greater flexibility as the labour market is more
open and market-driven. A
graduate can go anywhere in the world because of added
qualifications and thus possess the
freedom to choose positions of employment.
Globalisation has changed the labour market to such an extent that
employee loyalty has
diminished. Rather loyalty to oneself is all encompassing.
Globalisation may be regarded as a
catalyst to the increased movement of goods and services, including
that of people, in the
form of migration. This makes the distance between countries,
regions, villages and towns
and even workplaces themselves, easily attainable. The networking
of countries as a result of
globalisation has changed the labour market forever. Those
possessing high knowledge and
skills will prosper and survive. Lindley (1996) claims that
governments grappling with major
socio-economic problems have applied successive market-orientated
solutions by introducing
market mechanisms into the education system with increasing
diversity, as well as attempting
to strengthen those mechanisms already introduced into the training
system. Hence almost all
of the policy effort usually generated is devoted to human capital
development.
2.3 Human capital development
In todays global village people have to persevere and survive in a
technologically advanced
and highly competitive labour market. Change is the one
characteristic common to all periods
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of time and those who best adapt to change are those that emerge
the most successful. Human
capital theory asserts a positive relationship between investments
in the development of
human beings and economic growth. The idea of investment in skills
and knowledge is
paramount. Weber (2002) contends that there is strong empirical
evidence that
unemployment rates decrease as the educational level rises. Weber
(2002) also found that
literature evaluating the incidence and duration of unemployment
has always found education
to be a key factor because labour markets are not perfectly
flexible. This may result in a
reduced demand for unskilled labour and thus unemployment. A need
for human investment
in higher education is therefore necessary for the advancement of
the labour market. The
human capital theory views skills as commodities and operates
around the notion that an
individual will choose to invest in his/her own education on the
basis that such an investment
will result in enhanced marketable skills. These skills will be
recognised by a demand in the
labour market as technological advances require a better-educated
workforce for the
productive system to operate effectively. Research using the human
capital model has
provided some evidence of the effect of education on wages and
productivity, as well as the
positive impact of education on economic growth. Vandenberghe
(1999) however, states that
the human capital theory should not take for granted that an
individuals demand for
education will automatically be transformed into real human
capital. Despite extensive
research work that has been conducted to demonstrate the human
capital model, there is still
not adequate evidence to draw firm conclusions about the link
between education and
training and economic growth. However, despite these issues, there
is still a large body of
empirical data that suggests that vocational training does have a
positive impact on earnings
and employment opportunities for the individual with more
educational experience.
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South Africa has a fairly large population which is growing
rapidly. The natural growth is
supplemented by a large influx of migrant workers from neighbouring
countries. The number
of workers or potential workers is therefore not problematic in
itself. The main problem is
lack of skills. Human capital theory is an instrumental learning
process in which students
master the skills required by the labour market. The primary
purpose of universities becomes
that of preparing graduates for their occupational lives by
equipping them with the necessary
skills. However, Davenport (1999) states that both industry owners
and students are
considered self-interested individuals who seek to maximise returns
on their respective
financial investments by making themselves more marketable through
higher education. He
further contends that students are future workers who believe that
the acquisition of work-
related knowledge and skill translates into enhanced economic
return. People are, as a result,
more productive once they have received training. The latter
translates into higher wages and
in general should create a more productive graduate who can find
his/her niche in society.
Cohn (2000) compares the effect of training to the effect of
providing a worker with
equipment. For example, a worker with a bulldozer is more
productive than one trying to
remove dirt with his bare hands. The productive enhancing power of
acquired skills propels
an individual to greater heights as human capital. Investment in
workers represents the shift
from a homogenous perspective of the role of labour, and
productivity and growth, is viewed
as driven by a focus on quality and the upgrading of skills, in
line with post-industrial society.
Such investments are required to meet the burgeoning numbers of
technical, professional and
managerial workers required in this society . Human capital theory
assumes that there will be
greater internal mobility as a result of employer investment in
education and training. With
globalisation and increased pressure on the labour markets of the
world, the question arises
whether the latter will actually lead to greater employee
retention.
Career Trajectories of Masters in Education (M.Ed) Students.
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Robertson (1998) offers the view that human capital education, with
its focus on labour
market preparation, potentially undercuts the traditional social,
ethical and democratic
objectives of education by viewing graduates as passive learners
who are prepared for
globalisation. In reality, only larger organisations are likely to
invest in general training as
there is little or no financial benefit to them as they will have
to pay a market-related wage to
recruit and retain such employees. Buck and Barrick (1992) state
that contemporary human
capital education emphasises generic employability skills, rather
than specific technical
abilities, rather than specific technical abilities, to address
current labour market needs. In
other words, employability skills such as critical thinking,
problem-solving and a positive
attitude towards occupational change are not job specific but
transferable among a range of
occupational contexts. This translated means that a person should
possess a range of skills
that can be applied to a variety of jobs because society is now
faced with technological,
economic and social influences which cause significant change in
vocational roles. The
graduate has to adapt to and capitalise on these changes by
demonstrating the value that their
work can add to an organisation. This is imperative to the
fulfilment of a satisfying and
productive life.
Vandenberghe (1999) avers that the human capital theory is very
optimistic as it promotes the
idea that education is a very powerful individual and social lever.
This translates into better-
educated people and nations earning more and prospering at a faster
rate. Thus public
investment in education should be able to reduce income inequality
and eradicate poverty.
But the human capital theory takes for granted that an individuals
demand for education will
automatically be transformed into real human capital based on the
assumption that this theory
essentially develops a „black box to the production of education
issues. This model assumes
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that educational systems mechanically respond to their private or
public clients, or in other
words, the labour market. However, individuals or governments
investing in the educational
system will not automatically get „the best value for money because
the production of
education services is exposed to information problems, quality
control challenges and co-
ordination constraints. Human capital accumulation is more than
individual effort
accomplished by students who expect some financial return on their
investment since both
the demand and supply side can pose regulatory difficulties
(Vandenberghe, 1999). The
implication is that if there are no new jobs in the labour market,
a graduate cannot progress
up the corporate ladder.
Sugrue (2004) argues, however, that recognising learning as the
primary vehicle for building
human capital is the logical argument for the value of learning. In
the new economy, work is
primarily intellectual and human capital is a competitive advantage
for both organisations and
nations because it represents the knowledge and skills of the
workforce. Learning is the
vehicle through which knowledge and skills are developed and
maintained. Universities and
other tertiary institutions that can provide the right learning
opportunities for their students
will be most successful in terms of productivity, growth and
innovation, thereby boosting
human capital.
Organisational leaders, who address all the variables that
contribute to performance such as
incentives, work processes and talent management, maximise the
value of learning and take
advantage of growth in human capital (Sugrue, 2004). Sugrue also
suggests that if one wants
to restructure an organisations learning investments and practices
to mirror those of high-
performing organisations which enjoy effective and efficient
learning operations, then one
should gather data on „best practice from these organisations
through social networking.
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Implementing these „best practices can strengthen investment in
higher learning and other
performance improvement practices, which means investing in social
capital. Social capital is
thus linked to human capital at another level by linking employee
development and
organisational performance to include learning as part of a larger
set of human resource
practices. Investment in learning has become easier with the
growing acknowledgement of
human capital as the key to economic and organisational success
(Sugrue, 2004). There is a
need to maximize the value of learning in all contexts. Human
capital development assumes
that nation states are being forced to adopt neo-liberal market
policies and that the role of the
state should be to create the necessary environment in which
flexible market forces can
operate, so that such forces can respond rapidly to any changes
emerging in the global
market. In other words, nation states have to create a world-class
labour force in order to
attract investment and a demand for services.
2.4 Social Capital
A Swahili saying, Jima Jema hungara gizani, translates as “A
reputable name stands out even
in the dark.” To be recognized as the best in everything one
chooses to do is an essential asset
of an autonomous graduate. According to Cross (2005) social capital
is about building and
establishing networks with people in ones field of study. There
should be some movement
towards courses being mapped and adjusted, in order to be aligned
more closely with the
labour market. This is especially true if we wish to compete on a
global level with post-
graduate studies. Brundrett (1999) contends that two sets of
qualifications should be regarded
as complementary in the drive to achieve the ultimate goal of
better leadership and
management of education. In the literature on job search processes
and the labour market,
social capital has been used to refer to the social ties one uses
to obtain job information or
introductions to employers (Granovetter, 1994; Lin, Ensel and
Vaughn, 1981a; Marsden and
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Hurlbert, 1988). This is further elaborated by Woolcock (1998) who
proposes four
dimensions of social capital: firstly, horizontal associations;
secondly, social ties within
communities; thirdly, the relationship between civil society, and
fourthly, the State and the
quality of governing institutions. These are some of the resources
for which to strive in order
to ensure sustainable futures in a changing socio-economic
environment.
A question to be posed is what is the value of focusing on human
capital without including a
focus on social capital? Brinton (2000) refers to two types of
social capital: private social
capital and institutional social capital.
In private social capital, the individual has access through his or
her personal networks
whereas in institutional social capital the individual has access
by virtue of belonging to a
particular organisation, e.g. alumni associations, business firms
and government agencies.
However, in order to minimise institutional social capital, charges
of systematic bias and
unfairness against some groups of individuals gradually led to the
development of legal
provisions that require broad advertisement and an open application
process for academic and
most other types of jobs (Brinton, 2000). It is hoped that the
latter will maximise the variety
and depth of the applicant pool by openly soliciting applications.
Despite efforts to curb
institutional social capital, it is still prevalent in most avenues
of employment.
According to Hosen, Solovey-Hosen and Stern (2003) a more
comprehensive and universal
result of human activity is the quest for psychological well-being,
happiness and career
advancement. In general, people differ in the degree to which they
utilize social capital but
still have a common objective of enhancing human happiness. There
is a wealth of
information to be gained from the interaction with top executives.
Granovetter (1994) found
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that many studies have demonstrated that the overriding mechanism
through which
individuals find jobs in the U.S. is through their own social
capital, or „connection. They
argue that this reliance on social networks means that institutions
play an insignificant role in
matching workers to jobs. Instead what matters is the individuals
own stock of social capital.
Both positive and negative points of contention emerge from this
argument as a result. If a
graduate is outgoing and open, then he/she may be able to establish
social „contacts whereas
others who are reserved and unable to easily communicate possibly
due to their own
inhibitions, may find it difficult to build up their own social
capital. Unfortunately, the
reserved graduate may be a highly competent individual who has just
not been noticed. This
reliance on social networks suggests that institutions play an
insignificant role in matching
graduates to jobs. Thus Holzer (1987) calls for a more open
society. A number of western
democracies have highly institutionalised systems of moving youth
out of school and into the
labour market through apprenticeship programmes or other types of
school industry
partnerships (OECD, 1998). This type of initiative addresses the
changing demands of
employers and industry. However in an open market, global economy,
this type of initiative
would be difficult to propagate at a tertiary level.
Another interesting argument is postulated by Holzer (1987), who
claims that peoples own
social networks will often be closely tied to their social class
and ethnic origin rather than
extending outward into other social groupings. These are
constraining factors that span from
social, human, fiscal, ethnic and possibly even racial factors,
which may prevent educated
people from moving into better jobs. This chapter argues that with
our new democracy and
transformation, it is now easier for people of different
nationalities and backgrounds to
interact in a positive manner, consequently being able to build
stock of social capital. Social
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capital in these times is essential for both professional success
as well as organisational
advancement.
Falk and Harrison (1998) outline four key benefits of social
capital in the national context:
a) Social benefit, relating to such learning progresses overcoming
dissatisfaction with
narrow economic views of the achievement of a civil society.
b) Economic benefit, adding value to economic outcomes through
enhanced efficiency
and sustainability as a result of effective learning
processes.
c) Technological benefit, with regard to the role of electronic
networking and
communication and their possible contribution to learning.
d) Cultural benefit, especially with regard to issues of social and
cultural diversity.
Falk and Harrison (1998) viewed social capital as the outcome of
the quality and the quantity
of the learning processes between individuals and groups in the
community. For social
capital to become integrated into policy debates, the mechanisms
for creating social capital
need to be better understood and be brought into mainstream
economics research.
2.5 Career development
Three perspectives are enunciated on the role of tertiary
education. According to Nasson and
Samuel (1990) education is particularly equipped both to maintain
the existing social order
and also to promote varying kinds of change or mobility. The
question that arises is whether a
further education qualification enhances the graduates life in any
way.
The second perspective is that tertiary education is not producing
adequately skilled
personnel who are expected to boost productivity by virtue of their
newly acquired skills
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(Weber, 2002). This prompts the argument on eliciting reasons for
the possible failure to
deliver adequately skilled personnel through the stream of tertiary
education. The researcher
argues that if personnel are unable to increase productivity, then
the result would be a decline
in the standard of living in society. Hence the social order will
experience a resultant decline
and the workforce will stagnate with a lack of mobility, possibly
as a result of tertiary
institutions not being able to produce adequately skilled
graduates.
The third perspective that has arisen is whether Masters graduates
have been able to identify
and convert their knowledge into successful professional
opportunities, either within the field
of knowledge or related fields. Has the tertiary institution
promoted and accelerated quality
training for students studying at a Masters level?
Another perspective of education leads to an analysis of the
history of education patterns in
South Africa. The ideology and practice of the Apartheid government
influenced higher
education in South Africa. South Africas labour position has been
adversely affected by
racial discrimination in the provision of education and training
and by job reservation during
the Apartheid era. The political, economic and social conditions of
South Africa have
changed since the inception of Democracy. As a result of changes in
market trends over the
past several years, institutions have had to adapt to new
challenges. Things have changed but
unfortunately it takes time to improve the situation through
education and training. In the
meantime, South Africa is still faced with a surplus of unskilled
labour and a shortage of
skilled labour.
The most important resource of any country is its people. Many
post-graduates reach a stage
in their careers when they are not sure what choices are available
to them, or what is
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appropriate for them. Exploration becomes an interesting option for
them. The latter involves
levels of introspection and discovery. An essential facet of career
development is to gather
information in order to decide how best to build a career at any
given time. Through
exploration via the acquisition of knowledge, an individual can
identify other avenues that
require their skills, interests and values. Career aspirations must
be optimistic but realistic as
well. Engaging in further education is one sure way of validating
the growth potential of an
employees current job.
In order to develop human capital reserves, students need to have
the verve and gusto to
develop themselves in their prospective careers. Brundett (1999)
states that a series of
inherent tensions exist between the emerging traditions of
education management training
because there has always been some tension in higher education
between reflective courses
and those which emphasise competencies as they were seen as low
order concepts by some
universities. The latter called for institutions in Great Britain
to re-design Masters degree
courses to articulate with the National Professional Qualification
for Headship (NPQH) by
offering exemption from elements of the degree programme. The NPQH
offered a well-
rounded and relevant, professional and practical approach. This
meant that change was and is
necessary to improve standards at post-graduate level as both the
labour market and human
capital are important variables.
Cohn (2000) contends that the effects of training are very similar
to the effect of providing a
worker with equipment, just as a worker with a bulldozer is more
productive than a worker
trying to excavate with his or her bare hands. A skilled worker is
more productive than one
without skills. Robertson (1998) states that human capital, with
its focus on labour market
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education by viewing graduates as passive learners being prepared
for globalisation.
Buck and Barrick (1992) maintain that contemporary human capital
education emphasizes
generic employability skills rather than specific technical
abilities to address current labour
market needs. In other words, employability skills such as critical
thinking, problem-solving
and a positive attitude towards occupational change are not
job-specific but are transferable
among a range of occupational contexts. This implies that a wide
variety of jobs can be
accessed through a range of skills. Nevertheless, one still needs
academic training to
complement ones employability through boosting ones inherent
valuable personal
characteristics such as attitudes, values and beliefs, as well as
the ability to adapt to changing
situations in a work environment. Society is faced with
technological, economic and social
influences that are causing significant changes in vocational
roles. The ability of the
individual to adapt to change is imperative in the fulfilment of a
satisfying and productive
life.
Career development promotes life-long learning. However, Ecclestone
(2000) argues that
education policy continues to focus almost exclusively on learning
for economic
competitiveness. Dewey (1938) asserts that education creates the
opportunity for learning
conditions, not only to stimulate vocational development in the
form of evolving technical
skills, but also to foster enduring personal, intellectual and
social growth, which cannot be
merely achieved by teaching technical skills to students. The
question arises as to whether
South Africas education process is equipping students morally and
intellectually to be part of
the existing pattern of corporate domination, or are students
sufficiently empowered to
reshape patterns for greater flexibility and sustainability. Kaye
and Farren (1996) propound
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that careers are less like climbing a ladder and more like crossing
a turbulent river by leaping
from one tumbling log to another. Hyslop-Margison, Emery and Graham
(2001) state that
career development should present personal values and attitudes to
students, not as abstract
employability skills, but as qualities to critically evaluate on
the basis of their personal,
workplace and social implications.
Kaye and Farren (1996) suggest three simple steps towards career
development:
a) Identify an organisational need or opportunity consistent with
ones own career
development
b) Prepare a plan to address the need by changing the nature of
ones work
c) Start lobbying and building the necessary alliances for gaining
support for ones ideas
and new role in the organisation
It is hoped that implementation of these steps may help a persons
advancement in terms of
career development. However, one can no longer assume that moving
upward is the natural
direction of career growth as opportunities for upward mobility are
scarce. Horizontal career
development is also to be considered as an option if the new
position provides the employee
with new goals and experience.
2.6 Conclusion
Many people still find post-graduate studies of great value despite
overwhelming odds in a
competitive labour market. Advancement is most likely to occur when
an employees
abilities match the needs of an organisation. Employees committed
to moving up should
study their organisations strategic goals. Kaye and Farren (1996)
believe that everything an
employee does should contribute to his/her reputation for
reliability, results and innovation.
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This chapter creates an awareness of the dominant forces within the
Labour Market and how
to better perceive it. Secondly, the literature highlights the
power of investment in Human
Capital and how it can mutually benefit the employer and the
employee in a symbiotic way.
Germishuys (2006: 28) contends that in an age where intellectual
property is a major
commodity most organisations believe that retaining their best
human capital ensures
customer satisfaction, increased product sales, satisfied
co-workers, stable middle-
management and reporting staff, effective succession planning and
most vital – the retention
of deeply embedded organisational knowledge and learning.
Thirdly, the literature discloses the importance of social capital.
There is urgency for an
employee to establish a reputable name in the greater work
environment which is essentially
an important facet of social capital. In order to be marketable one
has to start networking
within relevant arenas, exposing ones credentials, skills,
abilities and talents. This will assist
advancement up the corporate ladder and afford one acknowledgment
as an asset in an
increasingly challenging labour market. A commitment to life-long
learning would ensure a
better opportunity for further career development.
This study indicates that an academic can encourage wide spread
acceptance,
acknowledgement and recognition in terms of employability through
understanding the
essence of the labour market theories, i.e. human capital
development, social capital and
career development. In other words investing in human capital,
making oneself more
marketable through higher education, investing on a social level
through networking with
people who are in a position to help one to progress in the
workplace and lastly, by using
ones acquired qualifications, skill, work experience and social
networks to advance career
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long-term direction of ones career.
2.7 Conceptual framework
Highlighted here are pertinent issues facing a graduate when
attempting to enter or when
already in the labour market. This section elaborates on six key
assumptions in an effort to
add clarity to the argument of why so many post-graduates can
literally „play the market,
being able to choose where they want to seek employment. This
section also looks at some
forces within the market, adding clarity and insight to some
reasons why post-graduates have
access to opportunities that are unavailable to others without
post-graduate degrees.
A study of career trajectories cannot be separated from the role of
markets, the impact of
globalisation and an increase in labour autonomy. These factors
influence how
institutions/organisations make choices on employee recruitment and
retention.
2.7.1 Post-graduate degrees and salary/job opportunities
Most students further their studies with the expectation that a
higher education qualification
will help them get a better job. Moleke (2003) suggests that this
is a reasonable expectation,
particularly in the South African context, where labour demand is
shifting to higher skill
workers and professionals.
In many instances the acquisition of a post-graduate degree such as
a Masters degree does
eventually lead to a better job with a higher salary. Hansen (1970)
states that between any
two groups of individuals of the same age and sex, the one with
higher education will have
higher average earnings than the one with less, even if the two
groups are employed in the
same occupational category in the same industry. Blaug (1970)
supports this statement by
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claiming that the universality of this positive association between
education and earnings is
indeed one of the few safe generalisations that one can make about
labour markets in all
countries. It must be borne in mind that employers seek to maximise
their profits and
therefore hire more educated people.
Blaug (1970) further deduces that employers pay educated people
more, even when their
education has taught them no specific skill, but because they are
more driven than others. The
employees that are achievement-motivated, self-reliant, who act
with greater initiative in
problem-solving situations, who adapt themselves more easily to
changing circumstances,
who assume supervisory responsibilities more quickly and those that
benefit more from work
experience and on-the-job training, are considered to be an asset
to the employer.
Accordingly, higher-educated people are not only paid more when
hired but are valued and
rewarded throughout their working life because they are assumed to
be more productive than
less-educated people. Unfortunately, the perception exists that the
private sector offers higher
remuneration to higher-qualified manpower above the salary scales
for the same manpower if
employed in the public sector.
2.7.2 Post-graduate degrees with thought and perception.
Advancing oneself academically has to be seen as an effort to
aspire for higher thought
processing, coupled with greater knowledge and skill acquisition.
Blaug (1970) affirms that
professional and vocational training does impart specific skills
that cannot be acquired except
by formal preparation. The researcher found that the interviewees
in general, when
responding to the open-ended questions, displayed definite signs of
higher cognitive
reasoning and ability. The intellectual capacity, wisdom and
clarity of thought of several of
the interviewees were appreciated by the researcher. Hosen,
Solovey-Hosen and Stern (2003)
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propound that education is the wild card in societys arsenal of
tools for positively
influencing the quest for happiness by its members. This
thought-provoking claim does hold
true upon reflection by the researcher.
2.7.3 The labour market dictates career choice.
People are often enticed to enter into occupations that may not
necessarily be their forte.
Numerous pull factors can contribute to these choices made by both
the novice and the
professional. Generally, these choices are bolstered by the lure of
financial gain, better
working conditions, access to better opportunities and greater
scope for upward mobility.
Individual happiness is substantially determined by the effects of
psychological, social,
economic and political capital on the ability of an individual to
sustain a predominance of
positive learning experiences (Hosen, Solovey-Hosen and Stern,
2003). However, on the
other hand, Moleke (2003) argues that those involved in career
change will choose an area of
study based on their perception of the labour market, their prior
education and access to an
institution or course of study, as these factors do to a large
extent influence employment
experiences of graduates.
Specialised fields of study, such as engineering, do impart certain
job-specific skills that are
clearly sought after in the labour market and as a result these
graduates are perceived to
possess capabilities that are essential to enhancing productivity
at work. In the recruitment
process, a person in possession of a post-graduate qualification
indicates to prospective
employers that he/she is a worker who has acquired the character
traits and skills necessary
for success. Thus it seems that the labour market encourages
employers to identify
qualifications and characteristics that correlate with job
performance. Individuals and
organisations, as prospective clients, are inclined to place
greater trust in companies that
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employ committed graduates skilled with the necessary expertise to
get the job done
efficiently. The assumption holds true – graduates generally have
an advantage in the labour
market, possessing qualities sought after in the labour
market.
When comparing earnings of any two groups of individuals, Blaug
(1970) maintains that the
more educated will definitely earn higher salaries than the less
educated. He also expounds
that investment in education is generally correlated with the
growth and development of the
economy. In other words, the educated individual has an advantage
with higher education as
it can affect his/her income positively, while at the same time the
economy will benefit in
terms of increased productivity.
Blaug (1970) explains the correlation between earnings and levels
of education by
elaborating that employers pay educated people more, even when
their education has taught
them no specific skills, because they are more
achievement-motivated, more self reliant, act
with greater initiative in problem-solving situations, adapt
themselves more easily to
changing circumstances, assume supervisory responsibility more
quickly and benefit more
from work experience and on-the-job training.
2.7.4 Increased mobility of skilled labour
Professional people are increasingly less dependent and less bound
by loyalty to their
employers in deciding on employment issues. They have more autonomy
in deciding where
and for whom to work. This leads to increased mobility of skilled
labour. Kaye and Farren
(1996) are of the opinion that in the new workplace, employees look
for employment
partnerships that will help them to develop portable skills.
Expertise and versatility are
developing into bankable currencies. Mastering a profession is more
important than vying for
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a fancy title and corner office. When the trappings of advancement
are stripped away in the
next organisational realignment, a workers proven competencies are
all that will be valued,
coupled with a larger salary. Current trends seem to advocate this
type of mobility, as it is
seen as broadening the employees base of knowledge and skills and
helping to develop new
competencies. A popular shift is from a slow-growing organisation
to one that is poised for
expansion as such movement can increase a graduates marketable
skills and network of
personal contacts, simultaneously building social capital.
With the exception of an ever-decreasing number of hard-working,
educated and loyal
employees who are content to see out their days within a fixed and
predictable job
description, more and more graduates are constantly seeking greener
pastures. It appears that
the well-educated graduate views the labour market as his oyster.
An educated graduates
perception is that all he/she needs to do is sell his/her skills to
the labour market. This frame
of thinking encourages multi-directional mobility. Blaug (1970)
suggests that employers
expect the highly educated to be more productive than less educated
people, which translates
into greater mobility and marketability for the
post-graduate.
However, Varghese (1982) warns that education can then become an
employment barrier
because of greater emphasis being placed on only the highly
educated entering the labour
market. This affects those who do not have the required
qualifications as they become
marginalized. Those who are highly certified are generally
considered for employment. As a
result, the post-graduate is granted vastly more autonomy because
employers believe that by
recruiting graduates they are reducing training costs as graduates
are better equipped to pick
up skills while on-the-job. The post-graduate recognises this niche
and will more often than
not render their services to the highest bidder and graduates feel
they have earned this right,
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due to the fact that they have invested time, effort and money into
their education and
therefore deserve to be appropriately compensated for their
sacrifices. In the future, when a
better offer comes along from another company or institution, the
post-graduate will regard
this as upward mobility and will proceed to the next level.
Kaye and Farren, (1996) agree that the traditional trade-off of
guaranteed employment in
exchange for employee loyalty was once a given in Americas
workplaces. Now the idea of
quid pro quo is on the endangered list. Few people expect to
collect a gold watch for thirty
years of faithful service. As traditional career expectations
unravel, workers find themselves
in the unfamiliar role of independent artisan seeking the highest
bidder for their skills on a
short-term basis.
Institutions under the pressure of globalisation and increased
labour autonomy now have to
compete for access to and retention of professional labour. The
word globalisation has
become fully ensconced in our everyday vocabulary. Globalisation
can be understood as
being the intensified and accelerated movement of people, images,
ideas, technologies, and
economic and cultural capital across national boundaries. We are
living in a time of
unparalleled interconnectivity, driven forward by the engines of
modern capital
reorganisation and the correspondingly changed interests, needs and
desires of ordinary
people everywhere. Globalising processes are sweeping all corners
of the contemporary
world and, as a result, rapidly shrinking the distance between
hitherto far-flung parts of the
world (Castells and Carnoy, 2001).
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Due to the effects of globalisation, most corporations are faced
with the challenge to
constantly boost their image, both in the international free market
as well as internally to their
employees who need to know that they are in the „right company.
Likewise, corporations
aim to attract highly educated people to employ because of the
perceived prospect of greater
productivity through their recruitment. Increased productivity
results in increased profits and
hence greater recognition in the global market. This also
encourages competition amongst the
individuals vying for recruitment, who are coerced into upgrading
their qualifications.
Globalisation may be viewed as a catalyst to the increased movement
of goods and services,
including that of people, in the form of migration. Corporations
have to make many sacrifices
to retain their professional labour force since persons with higher
education qualifications are
able to change jobs far more easily now than in the past. This
phenomenon has emerged
because globalisation has made accessibility to various countries,
regions and continents
easy. Companies have dangled a carrot in the form of performance
bonuses, larger home and
motor vehicle allowances, bi-annual salary increments, free access
to company leisure
retreats, time-share and so on, in an effort to retain individuals
they consider valuable assets.
Due to the effects of globalisation and labour autonomy,
corporations have found investing
money to train somebody new not a financially viable option. An
individual in possession of
post-graduate qualifications is most certainly a sort-after
commodity in the global labour
market, especially if they have gained expertise and experience
from a host of reputable
companies. The post-graduate is thus now in a position to dictate
terms and choice of
employment. Blaug (1970) found that employers who tend to still
“hoard” their professional
workers and treat their salaries as overhead costs, follow a trend
of the past. In summary,
corporations lean heavily on educational qualifications as an
indicator of certain personal
characteristics.
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2.7.6 The ‘push and pull’ factors linked to the ‘brain
drain’/‘brain gain’ of academics
The „push and pull factors in the employment of graduates in South
Africa are directly
linked to the „brain drain/„brain gain of academics. South African
graduates are marketable
all over the world, especially if they have studied at an
institution that is internationally
recognised. Prior to globalisation, highly qualified persons were
obliged to remain in their
current jobs because the chances of changing jobs were minimal or
non-existent. Post-
globalisation has influenced a restructuring of the labour market.
The highly educated and
skilled person is increasingly in demand, with greater mobility
facilitated by globalisation
and flexibility in employment that is more accessible and
market-driven.
Push factors are those factors that contribute to the exodus of
academics from South Africa
into a global market. The reasons are generally context-related and
debatable. Many would
choose to be located on continents that they perceive to be „safer.
Crime levels are a definite
push factor, especially when one becomes a statistic of crime. Some
respondents have cited
employment policies as other push factors because their chances of
job progression have been
drastically reduced. They would rather emigrate to a place where
their qualifications are
recognised and employment opportunities exist. Others want to leave
because they are
offered substantially higher salaries than they would earn in South
Africa. Some of these
push factors result in the „brain drain phenomenon that South
Africa is currently
experiencing.
The phenomena of „brain drain and „brain gain is temporary, due to
the steady increase in
international terrorism. Countries have tightened up on the issuing
of visas and granting of
work permits and have substantially increased the minimum
requirements for citizenship. A
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concerted drive to retain highly qualified academics and an
allegiance to South Africa is
needed for revival of the economy of our country. On the other
hand, although South Africa
is currently experiencing „brain drain, simultaneously there is
also a „brain gain because
educated persons from abroad recognise the possibilities for
employment here and are
making full use of this opportunity.
2.7.7 Conclusion
Post-graduates are constantly seeking better employment
opportunities because of better
working conditions, job satisfaction, recognition of effort and
most importantly, for greater
remuneration packages. Remuneration packages could mean larger
salaries, better car and
travel allowances and corporate privileges such as time-share and
other perks. This means
that the pursuit of money is the ultimate decision-making factor
when it comes to career
development. From the key assumptions highlighted in this section,
the reasons are clear why
many post-graduates try to constantly upgrade and further their
careers. The labour markets
have created conditions that are favourable for career
development.
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3.1 Introduction
The main purpose of Chapter Three is to identify and discuss the
tools used to compile this
research report, by examining both the positive aspects as well as
the limitations of such a
study. The researcher deals with the methodology that was used to
investigate the research
questions identified in the previous sections. For the purpose of
this study, the research
design was drawn from diverse sources using the qualitative
research approach. The
quantitative research method was not used because although strong
on reliability, it is weak
on validity. Once the case study had been identified, data
collection took the form of focussed
but open-ended interviews with graduates whose experiences were of
paramount importance
to this study.
3.2 Research approach
The research adopted a case study approach. Described by Leedy
(1997), the case study
approach is descriptive research in which data are gathered
directly from individuals or
groups in their natural environments for the purposes of studying
interactions, attitudes, or
characteristics of individuals or groups.
The following data-gathering strategies were used:
a) Extensive literature review
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Qualitative research concentrates on knowledge building rather than
knowledge discovery.
The researcher attempts to capture data on the perceptions of
people “from the inside”
through a process of deep attentiveness, of empathetic
understanding and of suspending or
“bracketing” preconceptions about the topics under discussion. The
qualitative researcher
should be able to recognise and avoid bias in order to obtain valid
and reliable data. This can
be achieved through the ability to maintain analytical distance,
while at the same time
drawing upon past experience and theoretical knowledge to interpret
what is seen, astute
powers of observation and good interaction skills. Qualitative
research enables the researcher
to tell a story from the eyes of the respondent. Some qualitative
researchers offer an in-depth
depiction that is true to an informants worldview (Neuman,
1997).
Frankel and Wallen (1993) illustrated the major characteristics of
qualitative research as
being its ability to generate detailed data with rich descriptions
of what is being studied.
Peoples personal perspectives and experiences are reflected in the
direct quotations, which
makes the research authentic. The value of qualitative research is
that it enables the
researcher to relay the story from the eyes of the respondent. A
qualitative researcher has to
ensure that their research accurately reflects the evidence
collected, thereby providing the
reader with a sense of immediacy, direct contact and intimate
knowledge without violating
confidentiality (Neuman, 1997).
This study required a small but in-depth sample to provide an
intimate knowledge base to
argue the main assumption, that is the link between career
trajectories and acquiring the M.Ed
degree.
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3.3.1 Limitations of qualitative research
While there are a number of arguments both for and against the use
of qualitative research
methods, it is acknowledged that there are limitations to this type
of research, the most
common being:
the possibility of bias entering the study
the perceptions and views of the stakeholders may not be as
accurate as the researcher
would like
issues of establishing trust and thus honesty in answers may become
problematic,
thereby impacting on the study findings.
According to Neuman (1997), qualitative researchers assume that it
is impossible to eliminate
the effect of the researcher completely. Recognising the human
factor does not mean that a
qualitative researcher arbitrarily interjects personal opinions or
selective evidence to support
personal prejudices. A qualitative researcher takes advantage of
personal insight, feelings and
perspective as a human being to understand the social life under
study, but is aware of his or
her values or assumptions. Hence the qualitative researcher takes
measures to guard against
the influence of prior beliefs or assumptions when doing research.
Neuman (1997) further
states that rather than hiding behind “objective” techniques, the
qualitative researcher is
forthright and makes his or her values explicit in a report.
Qualitative researchers tell readers
how they gathered data and how they see the evidence.
The research area of focus is on graduates who have majored in
Educational Management,
which was only offered as a course in education at a Masters level
from 1999, and to
ascertain how this course has affected their professional lives.
Unfortunately however, due to
a lack of respondents who have majored in educational management,
this study has been
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36
broadened to accommodate graduates from the broader spectrum of
courses offered at
Masters in Education (M.Ed) level at Wits.
3.4 Design of the research
The research design encompassed the use of literature review,
document analysis, case
studies, tracer studies and open-ended questionnaires and
interviews within a qualitative
framework.
3.4.1 Extensive literature review
The literature review involved an account of the theoretical and
contextual framework of the
links between education and the labour market. Books, articles,
academic journals and
electronic resources provided the knowledge-base for identifying
the core issues within the
research focus.
3.4.2 Document analysis
The relation of education to development may be investigated
through document analysis of
relevant educational policies. For the purpose of this study,
document analysis explores the
policies and course outlines that were offered for a Masters degree
at Wits in 1999. The
course outlines examined were from the Faculty of Education.
Document analysis together
with analysis of the answers obtained in the “standardised
open-ended” type of interview was
used for obtaining data relating to career and life choices made by
the sample graduates.
3.4.3 Case studies
The qualitative researcher has made use of the case study approach
in order to gather a large
amount of information on one or a few cases, to go into greater
depth, to get more details on
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the cases being examined. Immersion in the data has given the
researcher an intimate
familiarity with peoples lives and culture in the context of the
complete case as a whole as to
what have the graduates accomplished in their professional lives.
In addition, more than one
subject has been analysed so as to provide a realistic and lateral
account from the cross
spectrum of M.Ed graduates of 1999. It must be borne in mind that
generalisation is a key
issue in the case study approach. At a basic level, this means that
people make broad and
general statements and avoid specific or detailed statements. From
an ethical perspective the
researcher has to wholly accept what the graduates have said as
being truthful.
3.4.4 Tracer studies
Tracer studies serve as important tools within tertiary
institutions, providing information for
reflection to enhance future institutional development. The synergy
between course structures
and the working world is undergoing change at a rapid pace. To keep
up to date with the
demands of the work environment, course providers require the
essential feedback from their
previous students in order to encourage reflection and analysis of
relevant course material
and/or the adaptation of courses on offer to make them more
current, meaningful and
worthwhile. The new paradigm for higher education stresses, among
other things, the need
for institutional autonomy with accountability. Higher education
institutions need to be
concerned with the ultimate disposition and success of their
graduates in order to ensure that
their educational products are consistent with both student and
ultimately employer needs
(National Higher Educational Institution, 2001).
According to Schomburg (2001), tracer studies of graduates of
African Universities have
been conducted in order to address the issue of work skills and
high unemployment. From
1996-2000, a total of 15 tracer studies have been carried out in 7
African countries of
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approximately 8000 graduates, sponsored mainly by the Association
of African Universities
(AAU) study programme on Higher Education Management. Topics
covered include:
transition from higher education to work, job search, employment
conditions, use of
knowledge and skills, appropriate position and job satisfaction and
retrospective assessment
of study conditions. This tracer study identified the strengths and
weaknesses of the
methodological approaches used to trace the graduates and found
that the transition from
study to work is a process often marked by uncertainties and
anxieties in different parts of the
world, especially in the developing countries of sub-Saharan
Africa.
Another tracer study was conducted across 9 European countries from
1998-2000 with a
sample of 3000 graduates. This study explored the relationship
between higher education and
employment four years after graduation. The comparison provided a
good opportunity to
examine the extent to which higher education and the world of work
are similar or different
among European and African countries.
Muhammad (2000, in Gewer, 2003) suggests that general education
which prepares graduates
broadly to respond to all kinds of situations, should not be
discarded. He also stresses that
elaborate professionalisation and vocationalisation should be
reserved for the post-graduates
training which should be expanded to adequately prepare graduate
students to cope in any
situation, be it professional or vocational.
This study initially was to be a tracer study of 12 M.Ed. graduates
but sadly one passed away
before being interviewed, reducing the number to 11 M.Ed graduates
who graduated in 1999
from Wits. The research design highlights why tracer study theory
will help in reaching the
answers to the critical questions mentioned in the rationale.
Tracer studies are usually carried
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out for the purpose of measuring and tracking graduate performance
and hence infer
institutional performance. Tracer studies are often seen as
important tools of institutional
development, especially when the world of work is changing rapidly
(Schomburg, 2001).
Higher education institutions require systematic feedback regularly
to assess and renew their
curriculum policies. However, such studies are rare; none have been
done at Wits on M.Ed
students. Schomburg (2001) maintains that to know the whereabouts
of graduates, their
working conditions and their retrospective assessment of their
course of study might
stimulate the curricular debate and could also be very interesting
for the current or later
students.
Traditionally tracer studies are used for determining the attrition
of a particular set of people
over a particular time frame for the purpose of acquiring
interesting and useful information.
Usually tracer studies are conducted in the form of surveys.
Graduate Destination Surveys or
Tracer Studies are conducted by many tertiary institutions
throughout the world for planning
purposes and as an integral component of quality assurance systems.
For this particular study,
utilising surveys will not be truly beneficial. A survey comprises
a set of questions, usually
with closed-ended questions, handed out to a large population
sample. The surveys in tracer
studies are commonly used for tracking or tracing the specific
sample for distinctive reasons
and it is understood that tracer studies can be used to measure and
track graduate
performance and hence infer institutional performance. This
research report can be classified
as a tracer study because Wits School of Education has no
information at all about what the
M.Ed graduates of 1999 are doing in their professional lives since
graduation. As the only
available graduate information the university has is postal
addresses, the researcher had to
track down and establish contact with the graduates. This merits
and justifies the need for a
tracer study to be conducted. For this particular study, being a
qualitative study, it drifts away
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from the usual tracer studies and delves deeper to acquire more
personalised information.
Once the graduates were tracked down and interviewed, the data
gathered was analysed and
presented in tabular and written form.
3.5 Sample and population size
The population researched comprised Masters of Education graduates
of the year 1999 from
Wits. 11 graduates were selected. All graduates were required to
have Policy and
Management as the main courses for their degree, however, due to
non-availability of
respondents, this was not possible. Graduates who specialised in
other educational packages
were also interviewed. Graduates included those individuals who had
successfully passed all
the requirements for a Masters in Education degree and had attended
the graduation
ceremony or obtained their certificates as proof of
graduating.
The small sample of 11 respondents allows for in-depth interviewing
and analysis of data. As
this is a qualitative case study and tracer study, the sample need
not be too large as this will
detract from the main purpose of the study.
3.6 Interviews
According to Kerlinger (1973) “the best instrument available for
sounding peoples
behaviour would seem to be the interview with a schedule that
includes open-ended, closed
and scale items.” Interviews allow the interviewer to clarify
answers and follow up on
interesting answers. The way the researcher phrases the questions
or the tone of voice may
result in incorrect or inappropriate responses.
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The “standardised open-ended” type of interview was selected. The
wording and sequence of
questions are predetermined and the questions are completely
open-ended. Qualitative in-
depth interviews are noted for their probes and pauses rather than
for their particular question
formats (McMillan and Schumacher, 2001). Interview questions can
focus on experience or
behaviour, opinions or values, knowledge, feelings, sensory
perceptions, and the individuals
background or demographic information. These question topics can be
phrased in present,
past or future time frame.
Interviews were only possible once graduates chose to establish
contact with the researcher.
Interviews had to be arranged in advance at the convenience of the
interviewees. The
researcher preferred that the location of the interview was
selected by the interviewee in an
environment in which he or she felt safe and relaxed. It was not
possible to meet two
interviewees due to